Brit face jail in Dubai after friends took selfie with man

A British woman is facing jail in Dubai after her friends got into a fight with a Swedish tech executive, when he caught them taking selfies with him as he was sleeping in a hotel lobby.

Asa Hutchinson, 21, claims she was not involved in the fight with the Swede, and had only picked up the man’s glasses from the floor and ‘put them in the bin because she was worried someone would step on them’.

Ms Hutchinson, originally from Chelmsford, Essex, says that as her friends were just visiting tourists, and she is living in Dubai, she has ended up facing charges of assault and theft alone.

Facing jail: Asa Hutchinson, 21, has been charged with assault and theft after her friends got into a fight with a Swedish man in Dubai

Her mother Lucie Harrison has today defended her daughter, saying she is ‘absolutely and completely innocent’.

‘She was there at the time but all she did was pick some glasses up off the floor and put them in the bin because she was worried someone would step on them.

Ms Hutchinson herself has said that she and her friends had been to a brunch at Dusty’s in Dubai’s International Financial Centre district when they spotted a man who had fallen asleep on a sofa.

She describes how her friends began taking selfies with the sleeping man, Swedish a technology company executive in his 50s, when he suddenly woke up.

According to Ms Hutchinson, the man became angry and began punching her friends.

Charged: Ms Hutchinson, 21, from Chelmsford, Essex but now living in Dubai, claims she was not even at the scene during the fracas, involving her friends and a Swedish man in his 50s

‘The man woke up and began punching the boys. I heard the commotion and came back to see what was going on.’

The group left, but unbeknownst to them, the unnamed Swedish man contacted police.

‘He called the police and made official complaints about the boys for taking pictures of him, and for being rude.’

Police obtained the group’s names from the reservations list of the hotel restaurant and they were called in to a police station.

Ms Hutchinson says her friends managed to get their passports back by paying cash deposits, before flying home to the UK, but as an expat living in Dubai, she has ended up taking the full hit on their behalf.

She has been charged with assault and theft – the man is accusing her of having stolen his glasses them – and there is a real threat of a custodial sentence.

Ms Hutchinson, a key account manager for a transportation company, says: ‘It is so unfair, I was not involved, I just happened to be there, but the police are not interested in anything I have to say.

‘Once the man made his complaint it was taken as fact. I can’t go to jail, I couldn’t cope.’

This computer generated image shows the outdoor seating of Dusty’s, the hotel restaurant where the group had been enjoying brunch before the fight

‘There is so much on the news about the way they treat British visitors, but Asa was having a great time.

‘She loved the work and made so many friends – she is a quiet, sensible girl and really is the last person to start any trouble.’

‘What I find really upsetting is that Asa has not turned her back and run away- she was saying, I’ve done nothing.

As her friends were just visiting tourists, she says that she has ended up with the charges of assault and theft on their behalf

‘She’s really taking the rap, those guys in Dubai really seem to do things by association, I just find the whole thing so shocking.

‘I’m just very concerned about her. Police have taken her passport, so won’t even be able to take out money.

‘I’m very concerned about her mental health now because she’s very anxious.’

Her father Iain has added his concerns: ‘This older guy was the one hitting everyone, he ought to know better at his age than getting into drunken fights with kids.

‘And now he can’t throw his weight around and get them into trouble, he is picking on my young daughter.’

Radha Stirling, CEO of Detained in Dubai, the organisation representing Ms Hutchinson, said: ‘Visitors to the UAE need to be aware that justice does not operate the same way as it does in countries with mature legal systems.

‘In Dubai, if two parties are in dispute or arguing, the first person to speak to the police is usually the one who is believed.

‘Often it is a race to get to the police first.

‘By making this complaint, the man may have been safeguarding himself from being charged himself.

‘Also, it is clear in this case that Asa was a bystander, not involved with the fight and is only being victimised because the alleged culprits have left the country.’